The Official Blog of the American Pomeroy Historic Genealogical Association. The home of the Great A.A. Pomeroy Book Update Project, the Pomeroy Anvil Trail, the Pomeroy Collection, the Eltweed Pomeroy YDNA Project and the Mary Ann Coe Project.
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Friday, August 24, 2012

For over a
year the families of Jeremiah Pomeroy and Lewis Pomeroy of Onondaga and Oswego
counties in New York have languished in our unlinked database, so far
unconnected to the Eltweed line. There they accumulated many descendants, but
no identified parents.

What we knew was, according to the
1850 federal census, a Jeremiah Pomeroy, age 32, and wife Harriet and children
lived in Syracuse in July.Luckily for
data collector lovers they moved to Lysander in the same county in a timely
fashion to be caught in a second census taker’s net that November. [i]

Another Pomeroy family unit, headed
by Lewis Pomeroy, age 48, listed as a salt packer, and wife Louisa and their
children were also in the July census taker’s records for Syracuse.They too were also recorded in the November
census. [ii] A recently married young Lewis, age 20 and wife Virginia lived
near to this household that same month. [iii]

We could
follow these families forward, but not backwards into the ever expanding
American Eltweed line.That is why we
keep a database of “unconnected” or “unlinked” Pomeroy individuals and
households; hoping some day to see if these far-flung migrations continue to
run parallel or converge somewhere.

In the 1860
federal census both Lewis Pomeroy families were located in Oswego County, in
the town of Granby, later Fulton, where their descendants increased and
multiplied. [iv]Jeremiah Pomeroy,
variously recorded as Daniel or James, did a ten year stint in neighboring
Oneida and Madison counties as boatman and butcher before returning to the
land, this time in Cicero, along the south shore of Oneida Lake. [v]

And so it went.

THE ESTATE PAPER CLUE

This past April,
staff member Barb Dix, town historian in Schroeppel, and the village of Phoenix
in Oswego county, and I, began doing research on the Granby Pomeroys.We went to the Surrogate office and our
spirits were buoyed by a stack of estate papers for Louis Pomeroy (the younger),
who died in 1908.There we noticed a
surprising series of additions.Each
time his name was cited, written in ink was the addition of “also known as
Louis Pontbriant.”

We looked
through various NYS census records, and found the 1875 record which, unlike
other years, recorded the older Louis Pomeroy household in Granby under the
name Pontbriant.

While we have Canadian Pomeroys
linked to the Eltweed line who had migrated through New York in the early
1800s, we had not come across a line of Pomeroys that were French Canadian,
until now.

In July,
Barbara received a phone call from the Oswego County historian Justin White,
who told her Mary and Susan Pomeroy from Ottawa had stopped in his office while
doing their family history research. They left a phone number.Barb was soon in communication with Mark
Pomeroy in Ottawa who researching his Pomeroy family line and who had reached a
roadblock here and there.He was
surprised at what we had discovered, and quickly set about seeking his French
Canadian connection with the Pontbriants in New York.

THE DROUIN RECORDS

It is my
good fortunate to be skilled in using the French dictionnaire while examining
the Drouin Quebec Vital Records posted on Ancestry.com databases.

This data gave me entrance to baptismal and marriage
records. I finally had enough information to deduce that Lewis/Louis Pomeroy
and wife Louise in the 1850 census records for Syracuse and Lysander, were
likely Louis Pontbriant/Pontbriand and Marie Louise Preville, second wife,
married in St. Barthelemy, Quebec in 1843. [vi]

Thus, in
the census records that followed, with the exception of the 1875 NYS census,
and the probate file we found in Oswego, all the male descendants took on a new
name and were recorded from thence on as Pomeroys.Since it was the common cultural practice of
dropping one’s “maiden” name at marriage, the female “Pomeroy”/Pontbriant
descendants therefore had this second obscuring layer to their birth/baptismal
identity.

None of these descendants, from
what we currently know of this lineage, will tap directly into the Eltweed
Pomeroy line, unless they marry a partner of that descendancy, though they
certainly gain a rich French Canadian heritage.

Such
intermarriages have taken place. In fact while researching this family, we came
across a marriage of John Pomeroy to a Harriet Pomeroy.No Eltweed connection was established
however, as John was the son of our elder Louis Pomeroy/Pontbriant, his mother
being of the first wife Louise dit Pelland, and his bride was Harriet, daughter
of his uncle Jeremiah (believed to be Germain) Pomeroy/Pontbriant. [vii] So a Pomeroy to Pomeroy marriage,
or if the birth identities had been retained, Pontbriant to Pontbriant.

So far we have located the burial
site of Louis Pomeroy, also known as Louis Pontbriant, and his wife Virginia,
and some descendants, in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Fulton, New York, though we have
not as yet found the parents, Louis and Louisa, who likely were buried in this
vicinity. [viii]

Their
descendants have migrated from Syracuse to Granby and Fulton, across county and
state lines for generations. Some know of their French-Canadian heritage, but
many do not.

We have a
similar puzzle of another Pontbriant who may have changed his name to Pomeroy
between 1850 and 1860.An interesting
coincidence.He was Peter, an 11 year
old child in Clinton County, New York in 1850 son of a Pontbriant father. In
1860 we find a 21 year old Peter Pomeroy living in Illinois, as an
individual.The family descendants have
a story that their “Peter” stowed away on a boat as a young child and came to
Illinois.We are on the trail now, and descendants
are calling us now to learn more, and contribute the fruits of their own
searches.We will keep looking for
clues.

NBC’s TV program “Who Do You Think
You Are?’ asked a pertinent question.Genealogists ask it all the time in their investigations.Here, we found individuals of the diverse strands
of Quebec Pontbriands who seem to have taken, or been given, the name of
Pomeroy. They migrated from Onondaga and Oswego County (likely Clinton County,
also) and settled in Frankfort, Herkimer County, NY, Saginaw Michigan,
Youngstown, Ohio, Illinois, Kansas, and far beyond. Perhaps you are one of
them.

[If you would like to share information about these families
please contact Alethea Connolly at aconnolly@cxtec.com
]

[vi] Ancestry.com- Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin
Collection), 1621-1967, Records for Louis
Lonbreanl Dil Sausrezel (Louis Pontbriand/Pontbriant dit Sans regret) 1828,
Berthierville, image 10 [This document records the marriage of Louis Pontbriand
to Marie Louise Martin dit Pelland; they are the parents of Louis who in the
1850 U. S. census record in Syracuse and Lysander is married to Virginia. Variations
on the spelling of Pontbriant/Pontbriand surname, sometimes Pontbrilliant, are
noted through various records in the Drouin collection, and legibility issues
are challenging] See also in this collection the birth of Louis baptized in Berthierville, Quebec on November 8, 1830 whose
parents were Louis Pombrilland and Louise Pellan.See also in this collection, the second
marriage of Louis Pontbrillant, his wife Louise Pellan/Pelland of Sorel having
died, to Louise Preville of the parish of St. Barthelemy, Berthier Co, Quebec.
She is the Louisa in the 1850 census record in Syracuse and Lysander.

[vii] Our deduction that
Jeremiah was baptized Germain is
based upon a reading of the Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin
Collection), 1621-1967, at Ancestry.com. When the record for Germain Pontbriand
(in French) titled “Enterrement (Burial)” in the 1816 book of records for
Bertheirville, Quebec is examined, the letter “S” precedes the entry. Generally
this signals a burial, but the language of the entry is that of a baptism,
citing the common form for stating a baptism, as the child baptized being born
ofthe legitimate marriage of Jean
Pontbriand and Marguerite Lambert, and citing the god father and god mother.
These are the same parents of the elder Louis, cited in footnote [ii]. The
Drouin record collection cites his baptismal date in 1807 (July 14) to these
same parents in Yamaska Co.